Philip Athans, editor, Realms of the Dragons. Gaming (Forgotten Worlds) tie-in anthology with fourteen stories taking place in the Year of the Rogue Dragon universe.

Marian Babson, Whiskers and Smoke (aka, A Trail of Ashes). Mystery. I've been hooked on Babson for some time now. Her books are consistently readable.

Keith Baker, The City of Towers. Gaming (Eberron) tie-in fantasy; Book I in The Dreaming dark series.

Faith Baldwin, Bride for Broadway. A Dell Ten-Cent Book (#5) -- perhaps it should have been a Dell Fifty-Cent Book, because that's what I paid for it. Baldwin was a very popular author in her time, but I've never read her before (although a book she co-authored with Achmed Abdullah is currently on Mount TBR).

David Chacko, White Gamma. Spy-guy thriller, part of the Stephen Warfield series.

David Cian, Transformers, Book 2: Annihilation. Part of a toy tie-in trilogy.

Susan Collins, Gregor the Overlander. YA fantasy novel by the author of The Hunger Games. This one is Book One in The Underland Chronicles.

Donn Cortez, CSI: Miami: Cut and Run, CSI: Miami: Harm for the Holidays, Part One: Misgivings, and CSI: Miami: Riptide. Television tie-in novels. I've read all of MAC's CSI novels and graphic novels so it's time to try some others.

Terrance Dicks, The Bermuda Triangle Incident. YA SF short novel, part of The Unexplained series.

Dannielle Doggett, project manager, Mythology: Myths, Legends, & Fantasies. Coffe table book -- if you have a very sturdy coffee table. This sucker is HEAVY!

"Tabor Evans" (house name begun by Lou Cameron, who wrote one -- and probably all three- of the books listed), Longarm, Longarm on the Border, and Longarm in the Indian Nation. Books #1, 2, and 5 in the long-running adult western series.

Matt Forbeck, Marked for Death. Gaming (Eberron) tie-in novel; Book 1 of The Lost Mark series.

Gavin Gibbins, They Rode in Space Ships. Nonfiction? Accounts of two persons who claimed to have flown in flying saucers. This is a British book published in 1957, which was when the saucer craze was in its heyday; it was published by a respectable publisher and not by some fly-by-night outfit or vanity press.

Barb & J. C. Hendee, Dhampir. Vampire novel.

Charlie Higson, Silverfin. YA novel, the first in a series featuring a young James Bond.

Declan Hughes, City of Lost Girls. An Ed Loy novel by one of Ireland's best crime writers.

Shirley Jackson, Just an Ordinary Day. Collection of fifty-two uncollected or unpublished stories, some fantastic, some psychological, some romantic, but all magical. Edited by two of the demons she raised, Laurence Jackson Hyman and Sarah Hyman Stewart.

Cameron Judd, The Shadow Warriors and The Phantom Legion. The first two books in the Mountain War Trilogy of Civil War era novels.

Stuart M. Kaminsky, CSI: New York: Blood on the Sun. Television tie-in. See my remarks on Donn Cortz, above.

Walter R. Martin, The Kingdom of the Cults. Written from an evangelical point of view and first published in 1965, this seems to be a heavily documented, bleak picture of western religions that don't necessarily agree with the author's viewpoint. Among the cults are Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian Science, Mormanism, Spiritism, Theosophy, Zen Buddhism, Swedenborgianism, Bahai, Seventh Day Adventists, and Unitarians. No mention of Scientology, which moved beyond Dianetics a dozen years before this book was first published and two dozen years before the revised edition that's before me.

Anne McCaffrey, A Gift of Dragons. Fantasy collection with four stories.

"Jack McKinney," Robotech: The Macross Saga: #4 Battlehymn, #5 Force of Arms, #6 Doomsday. Toy/anime tie-in omnibus of three books from the series. "McKinney" is a pen name used alternatingly by Brian Daley and James Luceno. Evidently Daley wrote the odd-numbered books in the series and Luceno the even ones; each writer then revised/edited the other's manuscript.

Vernor Vinge, Across Realtime. SF omnibus with novels The Peace War and Marooned in Realtime, plus a related novella.

David Weber, editor (?), The Service of the Sword: Worlds of Honor #4. SF anthology of six stories in the Honor Harrington universe, four of which are novel/short novel sized, on a novella, and a short story.